mirror of
https://github.com/Llewellynvdm/conky.git
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Check out my config at gist :)
https://gist.github.com/Llewellynvdm/02279631eabc65601a5722dcf4780768
8922603b91
This patch ought to be small and simple ... The reason why it's not is me wanting the entropy data out of struct information. This means update_entropy() can not be used anymore, as it uses this globally available object. The solution I am presenting here is quite messy regarding header includes. Hopefully this will go away soon as I plan on creating some sort of "OS library" containing all OS specific routines and defining macros for easier capability checking in the non-specific code. This on the other hand means we'll need "wrappers" around OS specific objects, but that's not as bad as it seems - having non-specific text objects only will definitely clean up the code, and capabilities can be checked where they should be. |
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data | ||
doc | ||
extras | ||
lua | ||
m4 | ||
src | ||
.gitignore | ||
AUTHORS | ||
autogen.sh | ||
changelog2html.py | ||
ChangeLog | ||
check_docs.py | ||
config.rpath | ||
configure.ac.in | ||
COPYING | ||
INSTALL | ||
LICENSE.BSD | ||
LICENSE.GPL | ||
Makefile.am | ||
NEWS | ||
README.git-version | ||
text2c.sh | ||
TODO |
QUICK & EASY: $ sh autogen.sh $ ./configure $ make $ ./src/conky # to run Conky # make install First, read the README. This contains instructions specific to building conky fresh from the git repo: * Conky requires three "auto-tools", with at least the specific version numbers. Make sure these are installed: aclocal-1.9 automake-1.9 autoconf-2.59 * NOTE: You may also need to install docbook2X for generating the documentation. Conky will check for the following programs in PATH during configuration: db2x_xsltproc db2x_manxml xsltproc * In the directory where you cloned conky from git, run "aclocal", "automake", and then "autoconf". Make sure you run those commands with the latest versions... it is very possible that older versions are installed, and plain "automake" really means automake-1.4, not what we want, but "automake-1.9" instead. Use the "--version" option to check the program version, i.e. "autoconf --version". You can also try using the autogen.sh script, like so: $ sh autogen.sh * After that, it's the familiar $ ./configure $ make # make install You might have to do the last step as root.